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Hi Bill, I looked over Test46/47.java which you said would have examples of code to create glyph plots. But is there a way to create the glyph plot by just creating mappings in the mapping dialog box from the visad GUI? I'm trying to see what an input data file with a lot of data points looks like when it is displayed in a glyph plot. Alternatively, how did you see the output of Test46.java? Thanks, Michelle Michelle Kam (408) 742-2881 Lockheed Martin Space Systems Co. SSM/ATC/MSIS B/153 O/L922 1111 Lockheed Martin Way, Sunnyvale, CA 94089 -----Original Message----- From: Bill Hibbard [mailto:billh@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Tuesday, July 08, 2003 3:51 AM To: Michelle Kam Subject: RE: .csv file Hi Michelle, > The visad spreadsheet was able to load in my csv file that had 7 input fields > when I modified the header to what you suggested. However, I am trying to > produce a 3-D glyph plot in which 3 fields are mapped to 3 parameters such as > the x, y, and z axis, and 3 other fields mapped to 3 additional parameters > local to that (x, y, z) point. > > However, when I load in my file with 7 input fields and create the mappings > for a glyph plot, I only see about 3 small points on different faces of the > cube rather than many points scattered throughout. Do you think the scarce > number of plots could be from the values I gave each input field in my .csv > file (some possibly too small) or could it be from the function I set up in > the header?: > (index) -> (GPA, Distance, Phone, Shoesize, Year, Xoffice, Yoffice, > Firstname(Text), Lastname(Text)). It is perfectly OK to have dependent variables mapped to x, y, z, etc (anything but Animation or SelectValue, which must be mapped from independent variables in 1-D domains). If you want glyph plots, you'd do that with ScalarMaps to Shape, which requires some code to build VisADGeometryArrays and pass them to the setShapes() method of the ShapeControl (see Test46.java and Test47.java in visad/examples). I don't know why your points are all on the faces of your box - it may just be the nature of your data - but its not because of using dependent variables. > I'm not exactly sure why these input fields like GPA and distance should be > dependent variables and if they are going to be dependent variables, are you > arbitrarily assigning the index to it? Think of it this way, using a MathType of: ((GPA, Distance, Phone, Shoesize, Year, Xoffice, Yoffice) -> (Firstname(Text), Lastname(Text))) says that name is a unique function of (GPA, Distance, Phone, Shoesize, Year, Xoffice, Yoffice), which isn't necessarily so. If everyone has a private office, then perhaps all the other variables are unique functions of (Xoffice, Yoffice), in which case you'd need an Irregular2DSet domain sampling for office locations. But unless you're trying to visualize how shoesize and GPA can be smoothly interpolated between offices (does GPA drop off and shoesize increase in the executive suites?), you don't need these to be independent variables. Reminds me of a t-shirt I saw. It had a big C++ on it, and under that in small letters it said "My boss's grade point average". Good luck, Bill
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